Three phase + Ground and a fucking interlock pin. Loving it.
Now we're just waiting for PSUs to provide a 400V rail with matching connector. Corsair, you wanna be first to the market?
37 0 ReplyThere's no interlock pin on these. The 5th is a neutral. Hubbell makes a few versions of these with an interlock system (these, but these are just 3 phase 208v plugs with ground and neutral.
10 1 ReplyThe one on the tip of the plug is a locking nub, proper outlets have a power switch that will only allow the plug to be removed when switched off, otherwise mechanically locking it into the outlet.
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Hope PCPartPicker lets you factor in the cost of calling your power company and asking them to wire up your house for 3 Phase soon.
9 0 ReplyIt's three phases + neutral + ground.
4 0 ReplyThat's a regular high(er) voltage plug here in Germany, usually carries around 400V
2 0 ReplyYup, using them a lot for 400V industrial here in Norway. We use those exact connectors (but without the interlock) at work.
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I’ve used those for 208V 60-amp 3-phase power to racks in our Datacenter. Capable of supplying almost 18kW… those things are monster.
20 0 ReplySo barely enough to let a 5090 run in idle on your desktop
13 0 ReplyIEC 60309, they are standard for industrial applications in Europe
10 0 ReplyTrying to get a sense of scale, the 4 screw points on the red retainer look like 1 1/4in.
So are the prongs like the size of a thumb? 😳
4 0 ReplyMaybe a pinky.
But still, these are normally used for metal lathes and other big workshop machines like this.
3 0 ReplyPermanently Deleted
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"Not great. Not terrible."
14 1 Replyppl make this joke literally every time a new GPU generation comes out but i still laugh every time
10 0 ReplyI mean their last connecters burned out, so it's definitely an upgrade
6 0 ReplyAt least it's green energy, I think?
3 0 Replyexcuse you the plug is clearly red
4 0 ReplyRight?
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Same could go for any recent Intel processor too
2 0 ReplyRoentgens?! What year is it?!
2 0 ReplyJust increase the voltage. Less current, less heat.
2 1 Replyhigher voltages use more power and heat
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At least it won't set your house on fire
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